Hayes v. Hayes

379 S.W.3d 722, 2010 Ark. App. 796, 2010 Ark. App. LEXIS 842
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 1, 2010
DocketNo. CA 10-58
StatusPublished

This text of 379 S.W.3d 722 (Hayes v. Hayes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayes v. Hayes, 379 S.W.3d 722, 2010 Ark. App. 796, 2010 Ark. App. LEXIS 842 (Ark. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

JOHN B. ROBBINS, Judge.

| j Appellant Michael A. Hayes and appel-lee Sandra L. Otto were divorced in 1998, and the parties had two minor children. Since then, the parties have on numerous occasions been back before the trial court as well as the court of appeals with various controversies, including issues relating to child support. The most recent appeal now before this court relates only to Rule 11 sanctions. On appeal, Mr. Hayes argues that the trial court erred in refusing to sanction Ms. Otto and her counsel, and further erred in sanctioning Mr. Hayes for a violation of the rule. We affirm.

The pertinent history of this case is as follows. In an unpublished opinion delivered on October 31, 2007 (Hayes v. Otto, CA 07-15), this court reversed and remanded on the issue of child support because the trial court failed to comply with Administrative Order No. |210. Pursuant to our directions on remand, on August 12, 2008, the trial court entered a subsequent order resolving the child-support issue between the parties. Mr. Hayes appealed from the August 12, 2008, order, and we affirmed the child-support award. See Hayes v. Otto, 2009 Ark. App. 654, 344 S.W.3d 689.

The motions for Rule 11 sanctions at issue in this appeal arose from pro se posttrial motions filed by Mr. Hayes after the trial court entered its August 12, 2008, order, and Ms. Otto’s responses to those motions. On August 26, 2008, Mr. Hayes filed a “motion to vacate order or in the alternative to amend.” That motion consisted of nineteen pages wherein Mr. Hayes raised multiple issues challenging the trial court’s decision on child support. On September 2, 2008, Ms. Otto responded to the motion, denying the allegations in each paragraph and asking that the motion be dismissed. On September 8, 2008, Mr. Hayes filed a “motion to amend motion to vacate order.” In that motion, Mr. Hayes contended that the trial judge was biased against him, cited examples of the alleged bias, and asked the trial court to recuse. In response to that motion, Ms. Otto generally and specifically denied all of the allegations contained therein. On September 25, 2008, the trial court entered an order denying both of Mr. Hayes’s posttrial motions.

On December 9, 2008, Mr. Hayes filed a pro se motion for Rule 11 sanctions against Ms. Otto and her counsel. In his motion, Mr. Hayes alleged that Ms. Otto and her counsel knowingly lied to the trial court by denying every single allegation contained in Mr. Hayes’s posttrial motions. Because of these general denials, Mr. Hayes contended that the trial court |swas ill and insufficiently advised as to matters of law and fact. Ms. Otto responded to the motion for Rule 11 sanctions on December 23, 2008, asking that the motion be denied. On January 9, 2009, Ms. Otto filed a motion for Rule 11 sanctions and attorney’s fees against Mr. Hayes. In her motion, Ms. Otto noted that both of Mr. Hayes’s posttrial motions were denied by the trial court, and asserted that in Mr. Hayes’s motion for sanctions he failed to point to any lying by Ms. Otto, but merely claimed that she must have lied because she denied all of the allegations in his posttrial motions. Ms. Otto argued that sanctions against Mr. Hayes were appropriate because in his motion for Rule 11 sanctions he continued to raise the same allegations that had been settled, resulting in a needless waste of time and expense in responding to the allegations. Ms. Otto refiled her motion for Rule 11 sanctions on May 18, 2009.

After multiple hearings on the motions, the trial court entered an order on August 10, 2009, which denied Mr. Hayes’s motion for Rule 11 sanctions and granted Ms. Otto’s motion for Rule 11 sanctions. In its order, the trial court found that the facts, allegations, and arguments of Mr. Hayes in his posttrial motions were so intertwined within each paragraph that it would be a time consuming, expensive, and needless increase in the cost of litigation to dissect each paragraph contained in the twenty-six pages of motions’ and set out the sentences- or phrases that might be admitted and which sentences or phrases that should be denied. By way of example, the trial court examined the first paragraph of Mr. Hayes’s “motion to vacate order or in the alternative to amend,” wherein Mr. Hayes alleged:

|4This matter was remanded to this Court from the Arkansas Court of Appeals with the stipulation that “the trial court may consider its decision in light of any changed circumstances that arose during the pendency of the appeal.” Apparently this Court has interpreted that stipulation to mean it may consider any “change of circumstances” to be treated as if a motion has been made to modify whatever child support it ultimately produces to satisfy the Court of Appeals as to the appealed Order filed August 2, 2006. What this Court did was to hold a hearing and take testimony on July 8, 2008 without apprising Defendant Hayes that the Court was acting as if a motion had been made to modify the parties’ child support. Defendant Hayes was severely disadvantaged of being deprived of the chance to make discovery and to prepare to argue and defend the issues that were covered in the hearing.

The trial court noted that the first sentence of the above paragraph was accurate, but that the balance of the paragraph was argument by Mr. Hayes. The trial court indicated that Ms. Otto’s denial of the entire paragraph caused Mr. Hayes no prejudice, and that the subsequent paragraphs of Mr. Hayes’s motion were much the same. In carefully reading Mr. Hayes’s motions, the trial court determined that the only statements that could be admitted were quotes from the opinions of the trial court or court of appeals, or excerpts from Administrative Order No. 10 or other rules. According to the trial .court’s order, the vast majority of the allegations and statements contained in the motions were argument to which it would not be reasonable for the opposing party to admit.

In imposing sanctions against Mr. Hayes, the trial court found that Mr. Hayes’s motion for Rule 11 sanctions was simply an opportunity to attack the integrity of the court and to reargue the case that had been finally settled by the trial court’s September 25, 2008, order that denied Mr. Hayes’s posttrial motions. The trial court noted that Mr. Hayes had previously been sanctioned under Rule 11 at the trial level for filing a pleading against |fiMs. Otto in bad faith with the intent to harass, and that Mr. Hayes had previously (and unsuccessfully) filed motions for Rule 11 sanctions against Ms. Otto’s counsel in the court of appeals. Despite being given the opportunity to withdraw his motion for Rule ' 11 sanctions by the appellee, Mr. Hayes declined, and the trial court found that there was no basis for the motion and that it should have been withdrawn. As a sanction against Mr. Hayes, the trial court ordered that he not be allowed to file any future Rule 11 motions against Ms. Otto or her counsel without first having a licensed attorney verify the pleadings as being well grounded in law and fact. The trial court also assessed attorney’s fees of $750 against Mr. Hayes as a result of Ms. Otto’s having to defend against his motion for Rule 11 sanctions.

On August 24, 2009, Mr. Hayes filed a motion to amend order and motion for findings of fact and conclusions of law. In that motion, Mr. Hayes contended that he was clearly prejudiced by Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
379 S.W.3d 722, 2010 Ark. App. 796, 2010 Ark. App. LEXIS 842, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayes-v-hayes-arkctapp-2010.